Shortfall Risk

Shortfall risk refers to the probability that a portfolio will not exceed the minimum (benchmark) return that has been set by the investor. In other words, it is the risk that a portfolio will fall short of the level of return considered acceptable by the investor. As such, shortfall risks are downside risks. While shortfall risk focuses on the downside economic risk, the standard deviation measures the overall volatility of a financial asset.

Safety-first Ratio

Roy’s safety-first criterion states that the optimal portfolio is the one that minimizes the probability that the portfolio return, denoted by RP, falls below the threshold level of return, RL. Writing down this concept in symbols:

The optimal portfolio minimizes P(RP < RL).

As such, if returns are normally distributed, the optimal portfolio is the one with the highest safety-first ratio.

You should compute the safety-first ratio for each of the three portfolios and then compare them.

For portfolio A,

$$ \text{SFRatio}_{\text A} =\cfrac {(5 – 3)}{15} = 0.1333 $$

Similarly, for portfolio B,

$$ \text{SFRatio}_{\text B} =\cfrac {(10 – 3)}{20} = 0.35 $$

Lastly,

$$ \text{SFRatio}_{\text C}=\cfrac {(20 – 3)}{25} = 0.68 $$

The optimal portfolio should minimize the safety-first ratio. Comparing the three ratios, it’s easy to notice that the safety-first ratio for the portfolio C is the highest. Therefore, the investor should choose portfolio C.

Question

The returns on a fund are normally distributed. At the end of year t, the fund has a value of $100,000. At the end of year t+1, the fund manager wishes to withdraw $10,000 for further funding, but is reluctant to tap into the $100,000 dollars. There are two investment options:

First, you should calculate the threshold return from the information given. Since there should be no tapping into the fund, the threshold return is \(\cfrac {10,000}{100,000} = 10\% \text { or } 0.1\).

You should then calculate the safety-first ratio for each portfolio:

$$ \text{SFRatio}_{\text A} =\cfrac {(14 – 10)}{17} = 0.24 $$

$$ \text{SFRatio}_{\text B} =\cfrac {(13 – 10)}{20} = 0.15 $$

Portfolio A has the highest safety-first ratio. Hence, it’s the most desirable.

Note that you can also go a step further and calculate P(RP < RL). To do this, you would have to negate each safety-first ratio and then find the CDF of the standard normal distribution for the resulting value. That is,

Interpretation: For portfolio A, there is approximately a 40% probability of obtaining a return below the threshold return. For portfolio B, this probability rises to 44%. Therefore, we choose the option for which the chance of not exceeding the benchmark return is lowest – portfolio A.